Ironic that you mention multiple kids as a reason that kids might need help given the current revisions to FAFSA |
| I said something similar because our income (and COL) dramatically increased right when college started. I was arguing that we were judged by our current income and not the 15 years prior that we could save less. I was dragged for “whining” that our situation improved. This site is full of crazy a-holes. |
What a coincidence, everything PP does is good and should be rewarded and everything the poor irresponsible boogeyman does is evil and should be punished. Nobody is punished for saving, they have the money to spend. It’s their choice whether to spend it wisely or not. It’s also their choice on whether to send their kid to the $80k school or the $30k school. The kid in the house with the irresponsible parents actually doesn’t have much choice. He can borrow a ton of money. He can go where they give him a ton of money. He can join the military and get GI Bill. He can be a lot less picky about schools and options, other people are deciding how much money he gets. He has to hope his parents remember to fill out the FAFSA and do it right or he doesn’t get anything at all. Crack Moms aren’t actually all that good with paperwork. People who are crazy spendthrifts in one area tend to not be so smart when it comes to figuring out college plans. The kids often fail at figuring it out. |
Yeah I bet you wanted to be judged on the money you used to make and not the money you make right now. I’ll be sure to tell NYU I want to send my 2003 tax return from when I worked in an ice cream store and not the one from 2023 where I work at a Hedge Fund. So unfair that people want to judge me on what I actually have instead of conditions that don’t exist anymore!!! The nerve of people!!!! |
No, a-hole, I want to be judged in the whole picture. Sorry that’s too reasonable a take for you to consider. |
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I agree OP.
Many years ago (when I was in my early 20s) I was visiting with my grandparents. They were good friends with their next door neighbors, who had teenage kids. I noticed that the neighbors had recently built a beautiful new addition on their home. My grandparents told me that the neighbors did that because they needed to spend their money so their kids would qualify for more financial aid for college. What?!?! Is that really a "thing?" |
The SAI (formerly EFC) generated by the FAFSA is also used by schools to determine institutional awards--not just federal awards. So if you don't get a Pell grant, you might still get a College X grant if the total cost of attendance is above your expected contribution. This matters most with OOS and private schools (the latter which also often use the CSS to get a better picture of your finances). |
+1 Our increase in income coincided with paying for elder care for my DH’s mom, who had a stroke, which meant we could not save for college right away. Sure, we made choices (i.e., we could have forgone paying for her care, I guess), but context matters. Why stop at IRS? Why not grant colleges access to travel databases to see who goes to Europe? Luxury store sales to see who is buying Luis Vuitton? |
Schools aren’t stupid. You are not going to dollar cost average your way into aid. You couldn’t save? No problem, borrow or pay out of cash flow. PLUS loans available for all in any amount you like. (Some) CSS schools don’t ask about home equity because they are just curious. |
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+1
Also agree |
She’s talking css which is 100% not about helping poor kids w parents who make poor decisions |
Yes--there's a whole industry of folks who guide UMC parents on legal ways to hide their assets for financial aid purposes. I don't know how many people do it, but it's a thing. People reduce their income in the year in question, they pay off their mortgage, they have the grandparents contribute to the 529 plan instead of the parents, they buy a new car right before they report their assets etc. In some ways it could pay off, but it's pretty risky-- honestly you have to be right on the cusp, attending a private school, and willing to have your kid take on the maximum amount of federal loans, and not every school fulfills all need. So people spend all their money trying to get financial aid and then get loans and have to cough up the money anyway. For some percent it works out, I guess. But each school's CSS has ways of ferreting out the tricks too. In general, it makes sense to time big purchases before you report assets just in case--so if you need a new car, buy it before your report your savings rather than after. But I don't think it usually makes sense in the end to make a purchase you wouldn't otherwise make in hopes you'll get financial aid. There's just too much uncertainty around that IMO. |
Does the css use an IRS retreival tool? |
The CSS is informed by the information on the FAFSA which uses the IRS retrieval tool. |
I meant it as a way to show parental irresponsibility. Because that’s what the OP and many PP seem to want to take into account. |